The Oyster Perpetual today and the Oyster Perpetual from 1950. If you removed the Rolex name from both, you’d still recognize the essential formula—time-only functionality in a case designed to be worn daily for decades. But this green dial version (ref. 124300) represents something Rolex rarely attempts: using color to make a statement while keeping everything else understated.

When Rolex introduced the new candy-colored OP lineup in 2020, collectors initially dismissed them as quirky experiments. Then they tried to buy one. The green dial in particular sparked something—not the forest green of a Submariner, but a brighter, almost palm-leaf shade that reads differently depending on the light. You might say it’s just another dial color. To that I say: check the secondary market premiums, then we’ll discuss whether people care.

Look closer at what Rolex didn’t include. No date window breaking up the dial symmetry. No additional complications. No flashy materials beyond steel. The 3-6-9 hour markers use the same applied indices Rolex has refined for seventy years, and the hands are simple batons with luminous fill. Even the bracelet is the three-link Oyster rather than anything fancy. Everything about this watch suggests Rolex said “we’re going to make the dial interesting, and that’s enough.”
What impressed me when I first handled one was how the color never feels gimmicky. In dim light, it reads almost black. Under sunlight, it comes alive with that distinctive green that manages to be both sporty and refined. The 41mm case wears comfortably for anyone accustomed to modern proportions—not oversized, not vintage-small, just balanced in a way that lets you forget you’re wearing it.
This particular example comes from 2024, rated at 95% condition with box and warranty card. The newer 3230 movement inside offers 70 hours of power reserve and all the reliability improvements Rolex has made over the past decade. Full kit, recent purchase date, ready to wear.

At $69,000, it sits above retail but reflects current market reality for the green dial variant. These disappeared from authorized dealers almost immediately and have maintained strong secondary demand since launch. The Oyster Perpetual 41 in green isn’t chasing complications or precious metals—it’s making the case that sometimes the most interesting watch in the room is the one that does one thing exceptionally well.
Watch featured…
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